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A) Books:
1.
Acemoglu, D. and J. Robinson, Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power,
Prosperity, and Poverty (New York: Crown, 2012).
2.
Michael P Todaro, and C. Smith Stephen, Todaro Economic Development, 9 ed.
(Essex: Pearson Education Limited, 2006).
3.
ML. Jhingan, The Economic of Development and Planning, 11 th ed, (New Dlhi:
Valkas Publishing House PVTLTD, 1979).
Oxfam Media Briefing, Inequality and the End of Extreme Poverty Won’t live
4.
with Poverty, can’t live with Inequality (Oxford: Oxfam Media Briefing, 2015).
5.
Thomas, Pikettys, The Economist Explains, Explaining the World Daily (London:
The Economist, 2014).
6.
Wallace C. Peterson, Income, Empolyment, and Economic Growth. 6th ed. (New
York: W.W.Norton & Co Inc. 1988).
B) Articles:
1. Dollar David, Aart Kraay, "Growth is Good for the Poor", Journal of Economic
Growth, Volume 7, Issue3, (Washington, D.C.: World Bank, 2002).
2. Joyeeta ,Gupta, R. M. Nicky and A Ros-Tonen Mirjam, "Towards an Elaborated
Theory of Inclusive Development" European Journal of Development Research
(London: Palgrave Macmillan, Vol. 27, Issue 4, 2015).
3. Kjaer, A., "From ‘Good’ to ‘Growth-Enhancing’ Governance: Emerging Research
Agendas on Africaʼs Political-Economy" Governance in Africa (Birmingham,
University of Birmingham, Vol. 1, No.1, 2014).
C) Working Papers: :ةي يلجنلإا ةغللا ب عجارملا : th ايناث
1. Ashutosh Varshney, "Democracy and Poverty", (Government and International
Studies,Working Paper No. 46556, , Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame,
ىــلـع نـــش�ح ىدـــه
1999).
2. Birdsall, N., "The (Indispensable) Middle Class in Developing Countries; or, The
Rich and the Rest, Not the Poor and the Rest", Working Paper No. 207 (Washington
DC: Centre for Global Development, 2010).
3. César Calderón, Servén Luis, "The effects of infrastructure development on growth
3٦
and income distribution", Working Paper (Washington, D.C.: World Bank, 2004).
4. Commission on Growth and Development, "The Growth Report- Strategies for
Sustained Growth and Inclusive Development", Working Paper No. 44986
(Washington DC: Commission on Growth and Development, 2008).
5. Ebert Stiftung Friedrich, "The Quest for Inclusive Growth: Position Paper on the
Kenya Vision 2030 Implementation", (Nairobi: Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, 2013).
6. Ghanem, Hafez, "Improving Regional and Rural Development for Inclusive Growth
in Egypt" Global Economy and Development No. 67 (Washington, D.C.: Brookings
Institution, 2014).
7. John Luke Gallup, D. Sachs Jeffrey, D. Mellinger Andrew, "NBER Program(s)",
Working Paper No. 6849 (NBER, 1998).
At: http://www.nber.org/papers/w6849.
8. Kraay Aart, Mody Ashoka, "When Is Growth Pro-Poor? Cross-Country Evidence",
Working Paper No. 4/47, (Washington, D.C.: IMF, 2004).
9. McKinley, Terry, "Inclusive Growth Criteria and Indicators: An Inclusive Growth
Index for Diagnosis of Country Progress", Working Paper Series No. 14 (Metro
Manila: Asian Development Bank, June 2010).
10. Olumuyiwa, S. Adedeji, Du Huancheng, and Opoku-Afari Maxwell, "Inclusive
Growth: An Application of the Social Opportunity Function to Selected African
Countries" Working Paper No. 13/139 (Washington, D.C.: IMF, 2013).
11. Thorbecke, E., "The structural anatomy and institutional architecture of inclusive
growth in sub-Saharan Africa", Working Paper No. 2014/041 (Helsinki: World
Institute for Development Economics Research, 2014).
12. World Economic Forum, New Growth Models: Challenges and Steps to Achieving
Patterns of more Equitable, Inclusive and Sustainable Growth, (Geneva: World
Economic Forum, January 2014).
D) Reports:
1. African Development Bank Group: AFDB and Ethiopia Partnering for Inclusive
Growth, (Tunis: African Development Bank Group, 2013). 317
2. Institute For Statistics, UNESCO, Financing Education in Sub-Saharan Africa,
Meeting the Challenges of Expansion, Equity and Quality, (Paris: UNESCO,
November, 2008).
3. Klaus, Schwab, The Global Competitiveness Report 2015, (Geneva: World
Economic Forum, 2015).
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